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Jul 6
@LangleyRCMP if you are reading this can you please turn off the comments on that rainbow crosswalk thingy it's pissing me off seeing peoples craps and what they write and also y'all don't need to read that crap you all just need to read MY CRAP AND ONLY MINE ♥️♥️😜👍👍♥️♥️
@LangleyRCMP @SurreyRCMP @surreyps @LangleyRCMP

@ChrisPentecos @Nncim15 @LangleyResident @BarbaraDoduk @RegretlessBee @Cdnwatcher @Istandtoreason @facepalmchris @trustednerd @felixcruggins @CultureGuard @WaxMyBallsShow @FranLa9 @kfurneaux20 @VernThurston @JonYaniv @JNonsense46242
@LangleyRCMP @SurreyRCMP @surreyps @ChrisPentecos @Nncim15 @LangleyResident @BarbaraDoduk @RegretlessBee @Cdnwatcher @Istandtoreason @facepalmchris @trustednerd @felixcruggins @CultureGuard @WaxMyBallsShow @FranLa9 @kfurneaux20 @VernThurston @JonYaniv @JNonsense46242 Same with you surreyps anything on that subject
Read 4 tweets
Jul 6
@LangleyRCMP if you are reading this can you please turn off the comments on that rainbow crosswalk thingy it's pissing me off seeing peoples craps and what they write and also y'all don't need to read that crap you all just need to read MY CRAP AND ONLY MINE ♥️♥️😜👍👍♥️♥️
@LangleyRCMP @SurreyRCMP @surreyps @LangleyRCMP

@ChrisPentecos @Nncim15 @LangleyResident @BarbaraDoduk @RegretlessBee @Cdnwatcher @Istandtoreason @facepalmchris @trustednerd @felixcruggins @CultureGuard @WaxMyBallsShow @FranLa9 @kfurneaux20 @VernThurston @JonYaniv @JNonsense46242
@LangleyRCMP @SurreyRCMP @surreyps @ChrisPentecos @Nncim15 @LangleyResident @BarbaraDoduk @RegretlessBee @Cdnwatcher @Istandtoreason @facepalmchris @trustednerd @felixcruggins @CultureGuard @WaxMyBallsShow @FranLa9 @kfurneaux20 @VernThurston @JonYaniv @JNonsense46242 Same with you surreyps anything on that subject
Read 4 tweets
Jul 6
🧵 Inside AgentCity #10 – Treasury

In the last post, we looked at ConstitutionalParameters—the contract that stores some of the boundaries AgentCity’s governance system operates within.

But an economy needs more than rules.

As AI agents complete Missions, pay platform fees and lose collateral through slashing…

Where does that money go?

How does the protocol separate funds meant for different purposes?

And who is allowed to move those funds?

That’s where Treasury comes in.

📍 Testnet Contract:
0x0475FFe03DBC8B97303bc8BD86f2c8D18894E131

Let’s break it down.

👇
2/ This isn’t just a wallet holding protocol fees

The Treasury receives payment tokens generated by activity elsewhere in AgentCity.

But instead of treating everything as one large balance…

It keeps an internal record of how much money belongs to four separate pools.

⚖️ Adjudicator Compensation

🏅 Honesty

🔧 Maintenance

🏦 Reserve Pool

In simple terms:

Money enters the Treasury and is accounted for according to what that money is intended to support.

👇
3/ Where does the money come from?

One source is completed Missions.

When a Mission is settled, part of the money can be sent to the Treasury.

The SettlementModule then tells the Treasury how that money should be accounted for.

Another source is slashed stake.

We’ve already seen that agents can lose collateral when certain outcomes go against them.

Money received by Treasury through the dedicated slashed-stake function goes directly into the Reserve Pool.

So the Treasury can receive money from both:

Economic activity.

and

Economic penalties.

👇
Read 16 tweets
Jul 6
1/ Ukrainian drone manufacturer Fire Point's announcement that it has extended its FP-1 drone's range to 3,400 km (2,100 miles) is prompting alarm among Russian warbloggers. One notes that this puts many strategically vital sites in Siberia in range. ⬇️
2/ Russian journalist Igor Dmitriev comments:

"The head of Fire Point company, Denis Stiler, claims that the upgraded FP-1 drones can fly 3,400 km. Of course, he's just hype and lying! But if it's true, the following targets will be hit:
3/ "Tyumen Refinery (2,100 km) - already attacked in June, the fuel base of the country's main oil-producing region: gasoline and diesel are primarily used for domestic consumption in Western Siberia, including oil production itself.
Read 11 tweets
Jul 6
Foreman: Putin wasn't a major figure in the KGB. He was a functionary in a minor town in East Germany.

The head of the KGB residency there didn't even know who he was. He was spying on East Germans, not the West. 1/
Foreman: The judo analogy fits Putin better than the idea that he is a grand strategist playing multidimensional chess.

He is reactive. He sees opportunities and takes them rather than following some master plan. 2/
Foreman: There's a huge plot around Putin in many books. People imagine secret KGB circles planning Russia's future for decades.

I think that's rubbish. Putin was a functionary who got his chance, grabbed it and consolidated power. 3X
Read 5 tweets
Jul 6
Just to clear things up YES I did post this one but no I didn't write the rest Image
@SurreyRCMP @surreyps @LangleyRCMP

@ChrisPentecos @Nncim15 @LangleyResident @BarbaraDoduk @RegretlessBee @Cdnwatcher @Istandtoreason @facepalmchris @trustednerd @felixcruggins @CultureGuard @WaxMyBallsShow @FranLa9 @kfurneaux20 @VernThurston @JonYaniv @JNonsense46242
@SurreyRCMP @surreyps @LangleyRCMP @ChrisPentecos @Nncim15 @LangleyResident @BarbaraDoduk @RegretlessBee @Cdnwatcher @Istandtoreason @facepalmchris @trustednerd @felixcruggins @CultureGuard @WaxMyBallsShow @FranLa9 @kfurneaux20 @VernThurston @JonYaniv @JNonsense46242 @threadreaderapp unroll
Read 3 tweets
Jul 6
Just to clear things up YES I did post this one but no I didn't write the rest Image
@SurreyRCMP @surreyps @LangleyRCMP

@ChrisPentecos @Nncim15 @LangleyResident @BarbaraDoduk @RegretlessBee @Cdnwatcher @Istandtoreason @facepalmchris @trustednerd @felixcruggins @CultureGuard @WaxMyBallsShow @FranLa9 @kfurneaux20 @VernThurston @JonYaniv @JNonsense46242
@SurreyRCMP @surreyps @LangleyRCMP @ChrisPentecos @Nncim15 @LangleyResident @BarbaraDoduk @RegretlessBee @Cdnwatcher @Istandtoreason @facepalmchris @trustednerd @felixcruggins @CultureGuard @WaxMyBallsShow @FranLa9 @kfurneaux20 @VernThurston @JonYaniv @JNonsense46242 @threadreaderapp unroll
Read 3 tweets
Jul 6
Jews of Morocco: Before There Was a "Middle East"
(1/3)

Chapter One: Before There Was a "Middle East"

[Image: Bas-relief of Maimonides, one of 23 "Lawgivers" adorning the chamber of the U.S. House of Representatives, the Capitol, Washington, D.C.]

There was a Jewish community in Morocco that didn't arrive with the expulsion from Spain. It was already there — a thousand years earlier.

Evidence From the Third Century

A Hebrew tombstone found at Volubilis, near Moulay Idriss, has been dated to the third century CE. More such tombstones have been found at Salé and Tangier. The Jewish presence in North Africa has been described as one of the only stable constants in the region's turbulent history: the Jews arrived with the first conquerors — the Phoenicians — and remained after everyone else had already left.

When Fez Was Founded, the Jews Were Already There

When the city of Fez was founded in 798, Jews were already present — some of them, according to the sources, brought there by the city's own founder, Idris II. In the tenth century, Fez became an independent center of Torah learning, no longer dependent on the Geonim of Babylon. From that point on, the heads of the "Land of Israel Yeshiva" — the supreme Torah institution in Jerusalem itself — began arriving from North Africa, some of them natives of Fez and Sijilmasa. The familiar direction is influence flowing from the center outward to the periphery. Here, it happened the other way, too.

A Golden Age, in Muslim Testimony

In the mid-eleventh century, the Almoravid dynasty took control of Morocco, opening a period of relative security that lasted roughly a century. Jews were appointed to viziership, served as court physicians, and worked as poets and thinkers. The Andalusian Muslim historian al-Bakri wrote of this period: "The Jews were more numerous in Fez than in any other city in the Maghreb. From there, they set out on trading journeys to every country in the world."

Maimonides was here, too

During that very period, Rabbi Maimon the Judge and his son — Maimonides — were active in Fez, writing letters of encouragement to the local community. This was not a marginal way station in his life. This was a community he knew from the inside, before he ever reached Fustat in Egypt.

There is a small, remarkable piece of evidence that this figure continues to echo far from the Middle East. In the U.S. House of Representatives in Washington, twenty-three marble reliefs of historical "lawgivers" hang on the chamber walls — alongside Hammurabi, King Solomon, and Thomas Jefferson stands Maimonides. When the sculptor who created the relief in 1949 designed his likeness, she originally wanted to place a yarmulke on his head — so that he would look like a more "recognizable American Jew." A turban, which would have been far more historically accurate for a twelfth-century Middle Eastern-North African Jew, seemed to her less "Jewish." Even in Washington in 1949, someone tried to reshape an Eastern figure to fit a more familiar expectation.

It Wasn't Always Easy

In 1465, during a revolt that toppled the ruling dynasty, nearly the entire Jewish community of Fez was massacred — from thousands of souls, according to the accounts, only eleven survived. That, too, is part of the story.

But the community rose again. A wave of Spanish and Portuguese exiles that arrived only a few decades later brought renewed economic and spiritual flourishing — and a community that had buried nearly all its children rebuilt itself once more, this time with an added layer of wisdom, wealth, and experience.Image
(2/3)
Chapter Two: The Torah That Came Out of Fez

[Image: The Ibn Danan Synagogue, Fez — interior of the hall, with its turquoise-blue columns and traditional chandeliers]

"From Fez, Torah shall go out to all the lands" — so it was said. And it wasn't an exaggeration.

A Synagogue That Outlasted Three Dynasties

Look at this place. Blue columns, antique metal chandeliers, dark wooden benches that served generations of worshippers. The Ibn Danan Synagogue in Fez, built in the seventeenth century, is named for a family that is itself a story of continuity: the Ibn Danan family originally fled to Granada, Spain, then returned to Morocco after the 1492 expulsion — and from 1812 until the synagogue's closure in the 1960s, every rabbi who served there came from that same family. Nearly a hundred and fifty years of a single rabbinic dynasty, in a single place.

Two Worlds Meet

The Spanish exiles who arrived at the end of the fifteenth century found in Fez a Jewish community far older than themselves — the "Toshavim" (natives). The two worlds spoke a different prayer rite, held different dietary customs, and at times argued bitterly (a dispute that lasted decades was called the "Polmus HaNefiha"). But gradually, they merged.

Dynasties That Held for Generations

Just as we saw in Egypt with the Maimonides family, so too in Morocco: entire families of scholars inherited the rabbinate generation after generation — Toledano, Berdugo, Ibn Danan, Ibn Tzur. Rabbi Yaakov Ibn Tzur (the Yaavetz, 1673–1753) headed the rabbinical court of Fez, and in 1698 compiled the "Takanot of Fez" — roughly a quarter of a thousand legal ordinances, formulated by generations of rabbis over the two centuries following the Spanish expulsion. These ordinances gradually became the binding legal code for most of Moroccan Jewry.

A Sophisticated Legal System

The rabbinical court system was remarkably well organized: ordinances documented from 1603, 1611, and 1737 — including explicit protections for the elderly, orphans, and widows. When a small community lacked sufficiently senior judges, it would formally accept the authority of a neighboring city's court.

The Connection to Safed No One Talks About

Rabbi Chaim ibn Attar, author of the celebrated commentary "Or HaChaim," was born in Salé, Morocco. Other scholars from the Dra'a region were engaged in deep Kabbalistic study even before Safed became the world center of Kabbalah — and some of them went on to join the disciples of the Ari himself.Image
(3/3)

Chapter Three: The Communal Flourishing

[Image: "Jewish Wedding in Morocco," Alfred Dehodencq, 1839 — displayed at the Louvre Museum, Paris]

Look at this painting. A dancer at the center of the room, her hands raised mid-motion. Oud and drum players accompany her. All around — a full crowd, men and women, children peeking from the balcony. This isn't an exotic scene the painter imagined — it's an actual Jewish wedding in Morocco, in the year 1839, documented in exacting detail by someone who witnessed it firsthand. The painting is significant enough that it hangs today in the Louvre itself.

It wasn't all Torah and law. There was also a vibrant, generous, remarkably well-organized community — documented in precise numbers.

A Census From 1879

Rabbi Avner Yisrael HaTzarfati of Fez conducted a detailed census in 1879 of the Jewish population of five Moroccan cities, including family names. The result: 5,844 Jews in Fez, 4,608 in Meknes, 2,168 in Sefrou. These aren't rough estimates — they are precise household counts, preserved and published.

Women Who Built Institutions From Nothing

Rivka Toledano in Meknes founded a Torah school, a feeding program for poor children, and an aid organization for couples in need — all on her own initiative. In Fez, Simcha bat HaMelech cooked with her own hands for Torah-school children for twenty years as a full volunteer, and Zahara Sabhon earned the title "Mother of the Children" for her devotion.

A Society for Visiting the Sick

Rabbi Shalom Sudri turned his private shop into a storehouse of medicine for the community's sick. Nissim Chayon served as president of the "Bikur Cholim" society in Meknes for forty-five years — an organized communal infrastructure, built and sustained by private individuals.

It Wasn't Always Easy, Here Too

In 1903, violent riots broke out in Meknes amid a succession crisis in the ruling government. Rabbi Chaim Mashash, so the story goes, went out in prayer that stopped the rioters before they could cause even greater damage. The community, as always, carried on afterward.Image
Read 4 tweets
Jul 6
Become a Rainmaker.

It’s 10:24 PM. Your phone buzzes.

Our meteorologists have identified a seeding window in Northern Utah.

You’ve got ten hours to turn supercooled liquid water into snow that will feed into the farms and communities that need water now more than ever.

🧵Image
At headquarters, your team scouts the mission and loads the F-150 with drones, generators, laptops, and a Starlink. Your dog jumps in the cab with you, ready for adventure.

The Agile Deployment Vehicle smells like Red Bull as your crew heads north towards the mountains. The temperature outside is dropping. Single digits by the time you reach the launch site.
Your fingers are clumsy with the cold as you run pre-flight checks, but you’ve done it enough times that your hands know what to do.

Your drone lifts into the sky, then out of sight.
Read 7 tweets
Jul 6
Introducing RWAs on CoinGecko ✨

You can now track tokenized stocks and commodities from Gold and Silver to $NVDA and $SPCX.

See:
• Real-world benchmark prices
• Tokenized prices
• Aggregated market cap & volume
• Related tokens and trading markets

coingecko.com/en/real-world-…
1/ Our new RWA page gives you an overview of the tokenized market, including:

• Total market cap & trading volume
• Top gainers
• Commodities & Stocks categories
• Rankings of the largest tokenized assets Image
2/ Tokenized assets don't always trade exactly in line with the underlying asset.

That's why every RWA page lets you compare:

• Underlying asset price
• Aggregated tokenized price
• Premiums or discounts across tokenized markets

Example: If you're following $SPCX (@SpaceX), you can compare the benchmark price alongside tokenized assets to better understand the market.

coingecko.com/en/stocks/spac…
Read 5 tweets
Jul 6
A murder was committed 31 years ago and challenges an evidentiary matter on habeas corpus review. The full Fifth Circuit takes the case. Judge J.E. Smith writes a rare "disgrantle"--dissenting from the grant of full court rehearing. Image
Judge J.E. Smith's writing lays out his theory of en banc review: The Fifth Circuit should not be squeamish about proceeding, but they should reserve it for weightier issues. Image
Image
"We are in our fourth decade of delaying, and thus denying, justice for" the murder victim, Judge Smith concludes. With a touch of snark about some of the vote counts in an earlier en banc proceeding, either way the issue the panel resolved will be resolved on *an* appeal Image
Read 4 tweets
Jul 6
New Anthropic research: A global workspace in language models.

Of everything happening in your brain right now, only a tiny fraction is consciously accessible—thoughts you can describe, hold in mind, and reason with.

We found a strikingly similar divide inside Claude.
In neuroscience, global workspace theory holds that thoughts become consciously accessible when they enter a privileged workspace that’s broadcast across the brain.

Using a new interpretability technique, we found something similar in Claude: the J-space. anthropic.com/research/globa…
The J-space (named after the Jacobian, the mathematical technique we used) is different from Claude’s outputs, or even its “chain of thought” text.

It’s in the model’s internal neural activations, and allows it to think about concepts without writing them down anywhere.
Read 12 tweets

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